“…For example, voice identity perception is less error-prone when listeners are familiar with a voice (voice discrimination: Lavan, Scott & McGettigan, 2016;Kreitewolf, Lavan, Obleser & McGettigan, 2020; voice identity sorting: Lavan, Burston & Garrido, 2019;Lavan Burston, Merriman, Ladwa, Knight & McGettigan, 2019;Stevenage, Symons, Fletcher & Coen, 2020). Interestingly, judgements of a person's social traits (e.g., their perceived trustworthiness or dominance) are not systematically affected by voice familiarity (Lavan, Mileva & McGettigan, 2020). For speech intelligibility, studies also report that listeners are able to better understand what a familiar other is saying in challenging listening situations (e.g., speech perception in noise) compared to when listening to an unfamiliar voice (Domingo, Holmes & Johnsrude, 2019;Holmes, Domingo & Johnsrude, 2018;Holmes & Johnrude, 2019;Johnsrude, Mackey, Hakyemez, Alexander, Trang & Carlyon, 2013;Kreitewolf, Mathias & Von Kriegstein, 2017).…”